Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Tooth Implant Problems

Be greedy when ... others are worried.

"The financial world is in the storm, both the U.S. and abroad. His problems are now moving on the real economy. In the near term, unemployment will rise, production activities are more uncertain and the news will continue to be worrisome. For this reason ... I'm buying U.S. stocks. I'm talking about my personal assets outside Berkshire Hathaway, which until recently had only U.S. government bonds. If prices remain so interesting, I'll soon be 100% invested in U.S. equities. "As always the great Guru continues to surprise the investment community for its amazing clarity and rationality in his vision of the stock market. Buffet, in the article, continues: "A simple rule is the basis of my buying: Be worried when others are greedy and be greedy when others are worried. Now certainly the concern is widespread even among savvy investors. In reality, investors are right to worry about situations or handle business in weak competitive positions, but concerns about the future and long-term prosperity of many of the best companies in the country makes no sense. Surely these companies also manifest fluctuations in earnings, as they have always shown in the past, but most of these companies still mark new records over the next 5, 10 and 20 years from now. Let me be clear on one point: I do not know how to do short-term outlook for the stock market. I do not have no idea whether these will be higher or lower a month or a year. But what is likely and that the market will move upward in any case well before the general sentiment on the economy better. So, if you wait too long, the party will be over. Here are some examples: during the Great Depression the Dow Jones reached its minimum on July 8, 1932. However, the economic situation continued to deteriorate and get worse until the arrival of Franklin D. Roosevelt in March 1933. Until that time the market had already recovered 30%. Now we go back to the early days of World War II, when things were going badly for the United States, both in Europe and Pacifico. Il mercato in quella occasione raggiunse il suo minimo nell'aprile del 1942, molto prima che la situazione girasse a favore degli alleati. Di nuovo, agli inizi degli anni 80, il momento migliore per comperare azioni fu proprio quando l'inflazione raggiunse i massimi con l'economia completamente ferma. In altre parole, le cattive notizie sono il migliore amico dell' investitore. Vi permettono di comperare una fetta del futuro dell'America a forte sconto. Nel lungo termine le notizie per il mercato azionario saranno positive. Nel ventesimo secolo gli Stati Uniti hanno subito due guerre mondiali e altri costosi e traumatici conflitti militari, la grande depressione, circa dodici recessioni e panici finanziari, shock petroliferi, epidemie e le dimissioni di a disgraced president. However, in the period, the Dow Jones rose 66 to 11,497. Looking at these numbers you might think that it was impossible for an investor to lose money during a century marked by such extraordinary earnings. But many investors lost a lot because instead of buying stocks when they feel safe and sold when the news made them worried. Today people who hold cash or investments of short-term feel safe. They should not be. They have chosen one of the worst long-term investment that pays almost nothing and is certainly destined to depreciate in purchasing power. Just the policies that governments are taking to combat the current crisis will generate inflation and accelerate even more the loss of the real value of cash. The actions will almost certainly provide better results than the cash over the next decade and probably substantially. Those investors who now hold liquid assets they think they can move their investments to the equity in the most over time. Waiting for good news to come, these people are ignoring Wayne Gretzky's advice, the best ice hockey player of all time who has always maintained: I fly where it will go hard, not where it was before. I do not like to express opinions on the stock market and once again I stress that I have no idea what will the stock market in the short term. I still want to follow the motto of a restaurant that opened its business in a building formerly occupied by a bank. The advertisement reads as follows: - Put your mouth where the money before there were -. Today my money and my mouth both say: ACTIONS. " Warren Buffet.

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